
Context: Deciding Under Escalation
In a conflict zone, the question is always the same: when does staying stop being rational?
The constraint is not information. It is timing.
The decision must be made for the first time at the moment of maximum pressure, when information is least reliable and emotion is strongest.
Government advice provides stability, not timing. Forty days of unchanged “orange” is not a decision tool. Corporate risk advisory provides information without thresholds. It describes events, but does not define when they justify action.
So people improvise.
And improvisation under pressure produces two predictable errors: leaving too early, driven by fear, or leaving too late, driven by hope.
Both feel rational in the moment. Both are strategically expensive.
This is not an information problem. It is a decision problem under uncertainty and time pressure.
The Framework
The solution is not more information. It is pre-commitment.
The framework shifts the decision from the moment of pressure to a moment of clarity. It defines in advance what evidence justifies which action. At the critical moment, you do not decide for the first time. You verify whether the conditions you defined earlier have been met.
The structure follows three layers.
Layer 1: Structural Preconditions
Slow-moving conditions that must exist before escalation becomes possible.
Layer 2: Institutional Brakes
Mechanisms that can still stop escalation. Scored as OK, Degraded, or Failed. As these erode, the distance to escalation closes.
Layer 3: Threshold Events
Fast signals with limited reaction time. Rhetoric shifts, attacks, pattern breaks.
The framework does not measure noise. It measures whether escalation is becoming unavoidable.
Four action levels translate analysis into decisions: Monitor, Prepare, Act, Shelter. Each level is triggered by explicit evidence tests.
Three mechanisms make it operational: confidence scoring, direction of travel, and pre-identified triggers for the next move.
The output is not a narrative. It is a decision-ready position.
You can download the full Escalation Risk Assessment Framework v7.0 here.
Assessment Log
| Date | Time (GST) | Assessment | Level | Momentum | Download |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12 Apr 2026 | 10:00 | T+102 Post-Ceasefire | B (Prepare) upper boundary | Rising | [Download] |
| 10 Apr 2026 | 8:00 | T+52 Post-Ceasefire | B (Prepare) upper boundary | Rising | [Download] |
| 9 Apr 2026 | 20:30 | T+41 Post-Ceasefire | B (Prepare) upper boundary | Falling | [Download] |
| 9 Apr 2026 | 12:00 | T+32 Post-Ceasefire | B (Prepare) upper boundary | Stable | [Download] |
| 8 Apr 2026 | 22:00 | T+18 Post-Ceasefire | B (Prepare) upper boundary | Stable | [Download] |
| 8 Apr 2026 | 16:00 | T+12 Post-Ceasefire | B (Prepare) upper boundary | Rising | [Download] |
| 8 Apr 2026 | 10:00 | T+6 Post-Ceasefire | B (Prepare) mid-range | Falling | [Download] |
| 7 Apr 2026 | 22:00 | T-6 Deadline Protocol | B (Prepare) upper boundary | Rising | [Download] |
| 7 Apr 2026 | 16:30 | Daily Assessment | B (Prepare) upper boundary | Rising | [Download] |
Position without direction is incomplete. Level is a snapshot. Momentum is the trajectory. A Level B that is rising is closer to action than a Level B that is falling.